From
the other thread:
The heart of the free exercise clause is that the government does not get entangled with the internal governance of churches and other religious establishments. This is probably the most clearly defined precedent in free exercise clause jurisprudence. Ms. Perich was a "called" minister-teacher. That they fired her is a clear matter of internal church governance, as is every decision concerning who they consider a minister, who they consider fit for ministry, etc.
And yet, the EEOC went right after this church for the violation of labor laws, as if they applied to, again, what is clearly a matter of internal church governance.
So then, it is your position that the scenario which I laid out (principal of religious school fires teacher for refusing to date him) would and should be completely exempt from any sexual harassment laws? And that it would be
brazen disregard of the First Amendment for any court to rule otherwise?
The "free exercise" clause is not a "get out of jail free" card just because you file as a religious organization. While many conservatives seem to be under the impression that the First Amendment means that any religious organization can do whatever the hell they want to any person they employ and such conduct is outside the rule of law, you will note that the SCOTUS specifically stated that Hosana-Tabor was NOT to be taken as precedent that aggrieved employees could not file suit against their employers (just not in that case).
Another point... normally, the Conservatives get harangued on this board for trying to merge church and state in law. This is a clear case of an ultra-liberal EEOC, functioning as part of an ultra-liberal Administration, attempting to violate the separation of church and state, no?
I'd say it's a case of the government enforcing labor laws on an employer.
The same sense of outrage that you used to describe the blatant disrespect that the Obama administration showed for the First Amendment in Hosana-Tabor was frequently on display this spring when the ACA
forced Catholic hospitals to pay for plans that provided birth control to their employees. So how far does this "free exercise" rabbit hole go down? Can a Catholic hospital hire janitors as exempt employees and work them 70 hours a week with no overtime? Can a Scientology... umm, preacher?... fire his secretary because she won't give him a blowjob?